Compliance
Congress Enacts Anti-Money-Laundering Act - Some Implications

New AML legislation has been enacted by Congress which builds a new set of obligations for financial institutions, including building a federal beneficial ownership registry. As previously reported, the US Senate recently voted by a veto-proof margin to outlaw anonymous shell corporations.
(An earlier version of this article appeared on January 8, 2021, in Compliance Matters, a sister news service to this one. The article is authored by Jodi Avergun and Christian Larson, partner and associate of Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft. The usual editorial disclaimers apply to the comments of guest contributors.)
On January 1 Congress overrode a presidential veto to enact the
Anti-Money-Laundering Act 2020. As part of the National Defence
Authorisation Act for the fiscal year of 2021, this statute
creates a broad range of new AML obligations for financial
institutions.
The Act creates a federal beneficial ownership registry that will
require many US entities to report beneficial information
directly to FinCEN periodically.
It creates a new "whistleblower program" for offences against the
Bank Secrecy Act 1970. The new program removes an earlier
program’s cap on rewards to informants and protects them more
thoroughly from retaliatory acts by employers.
In addition, the Act creates two new criminal offenses relating
to any misrepresentation to a financial institution of
significant information concerning assets connected with senior
foreign political figures or entities that the Government has
designated as "primary money laundering concerns.”
The Act also includes (1) heavier penalties for persons who
repeatedly violate the Bank Secrecy Act, (2) an additional fine
in the amount of any profit gained due to an offence against the
BSA and (3) a requirement that directors, officers, partners or
employees of financial institutions should repay any bonuses they
might have earnt as individuals during a year in which they
offended against the BSA.
A new provision permits the Treasury and the Department of
Justice to subpoena the foreign records of foreign banks that
maintain correspondent accounts at US financial institutions.
Other provisions of the Act require FinCEN to (1) establish
national AML priorities, (2) assess the usefulness of a "Bank
Secrecy Act-focused no-action letter process" and (3) evaluate
the adequacy of the thresholds above which financial institutions
have to send off currency transaction and suspicious activity
reports to the authorities.
The Anti-Money Laundering Act 2020 is the most comprehensive
overhaul of the Bank Secrecy Act since the Uniting and
Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act 2001 (the USA PATRIOT Act).
Spanning more than 85 pages of new statutes, the Act contains
significant changes, minor tweaks and calls on government bodies
to conduct studies.
Many of the new provisions, including some to create a federal
registry of beneficial ownership, call for regulations that will
be promulgated months or years from now. Other provisions, such
as the new criminal offences, take effect immediately.
Requirements that relate to the beneficial ownership of private
equity or family office ownership structures, as well as the
expansion of the DoJ's authority to issue subpoenas to foreign
banks with US correspondent accounts, warrant significant
attention and represent a sea change from the previous AML
regime.